A number of things have caused me concern in the 10 days since. The first was a radio bulletin on the morning of 7 March when one of the Auckland principals who had spoken against the review and its recommendations (to have most of the expressed concerns, in my view, alleviated by the Review Team). In the broadcast he was denying that he was spreading misinformation and in doing so was spreading disinformation by claiming that 90% of principals at the meeting were opposed to the review recommendations. I was at that meeting and no vote was taken on our response to the review. There was no doubt that most speakers spoke loudly and forcibly (often accompanied by applause) against the review recommendations. Three of us spoke more openly about the possibilities about improvement for our sector. Several others approached me afterwards and since to express support for what I had expressed. I have no idea of the % of actual views across the 50 - 60 principals who were there but it was certainly not 90/10%.
Throughout the week I received information on what some principals were sending to their school communities to encourage them to oppose the review recommendations. I was horrified by the level of misinformation and my level of alarm was increasing. I suspect most teachers in those schools, who most probably do not have the time to gain a full understanding of the Review recommendations will be receiving similar views from their principal.
I then found myself in receipt of a draft pamphlet shared with a group of principals that a group known as, Community Schools Alliance, had produced apparently as part of a launch to oppose the review recommendations. I can identify the logos of Auckland Grammar, Rangitoto College, Westlake Boys and Massey High School (of course this may only be a draft mock up and may not reflect the views of these schools.) In fact, I hope it is a draft mock-up as I am sure that the Rototuna Senior High School Kapa Haka Roopu would be stunned to find themselves featuring on the front of this pamphlet!
Why would they be stunned? Because it is so full of misleading information that it is hard to believe that there have been simple errors rather that the intent is to mislead. I can only hazard a guess as to the motivation for such practice.
The section headed 17 Problems with the Haque Plan begins with a common tactic to promote propaganda - don't give the report it's correct title, but personalise it so that opposition can be rallied around a person.
In 30 minutes I was able to find so many examples of inaccuracies and misleading information which I have summarised:
- Schools will no longer be community-led.
- Myth: Boards of Trustees will be replaced by education “Hubs” appointed in Wellington
- Fact: Hubs will take over administration tasks currently carried out by Boards, leaving Boards to concentrate on strategic planning, school culture, student wellbeing and success, localised curriculum and assessment prectice.
- Boards of Trustees will lose all governance responsibilities
- Myth: Hubs will directly employ principals and teachers
- Fact: Boards will be involved in the appointment of their principal and have a veto over any decision made by the Hub.
- Fact: Principals will have full control of their staffing appointments and appoint their own teachers (FAQs, Review Report p2)
- Myth: Hubs will decide the culture and approach of each school
- Fact: Boards will still determine the culture, character and nature of their school
- Fact: Boards will focus on learning and teaching decisions for their schools
- Students may not be able to attend their local school
- Myth: Hubs will control enrolment processes
- Fact: “Children and young people will have a right to attend their local school” (FAQs, Review Report p3)
- Principals will be shifted around schools every 5 years
- Fact: Principals will be appointed on 5 year contracts and will have rights of renewal
- School structures will change dramatically
- Myth: All current high schools will be replaced with an “American” model of Senior and Middle schools
- Fact: Intermediates will be phased out in the long term and the the proposed model could be:
- Primary schools (years 1 - 6), middle schools (years 7 - 10), and senior college (years 11 - 13)
- OR full primary schools (years 1 - 8) and secondary schools (years 9 - 13)
- OR composite (Y1 - 13) schools, particularly in rural areas
- Teachers could be shifted around schools on a whim
- Fact: Principals will have full control of their staffing entitlements and appoint their own teachers
- Parents lose choices
- Myth: The Plan discourages schools from focusing on different approaches that give parents options for their children’s education
- Fact: Boards “will focus on learning and teaching decisions for their schools which directly affects the welfare of students, localised curriculum and assessment, student success and wellbeing” (FAQs, Review Report p2)
- Schools will have less control over their finances
- Fact: Principals will control and have full discretion of the use of their operational grants (FAQs: Review Report p2)
- Fact: Boards will have full control of all locally raised funds (FAQs, Review Report p1)
I have also had a local principal contact me because he has felt uncomfortable being contacted by a principal in this Community Schools Alliance to sign up to their cause.
One principal communicated with me last week and I thought the following point he made was quite poignant:
"the gap between haves and have nots has widened in my perception. That alone concerns me, and what concerns me more is that there seems a significant portion of the population that either does not know and/or does not care. In an education context, that manifests itself easily in the competitive model that principals and schools have created - the rich continue to get richer and so on. I totally get why some schools are very anti some of the proposals in the Taskforce Report - it threatens the foundation on which their strengths are built."
Another principal contributed a view which highlights this new culture of consultation being so important so that all views are heard (unlike in the past) and this is making some uncomfortable:
"The current MOE has recognised that there my be something that can be reviewed and altered to support our current system as the inequity and disparity between schools is a divide that only continues to grow. Gathering a range of work groups to investigate the system including NCEA and tomorrows schools allow all that have access to the system an opportunity to have a voice. This includes schools, students, whanau, iwi etc and it is important that the whole of the communities are afforded the opportunity to receive clarity and contribute to really important decisions that will impact on our society. No one group is more important than the other as we are all stakeholders in our education system."
Another contacted with:
"My 10 years as a Principal has taught me that we have a growing gap between the haves and have nots and we have to be big and bold and challenge this reality rather than continue to perpetuate this within our education system"
And another shared this view around what could be achieved if we were open to exploring the recommendations rather than outright opposition driven by inaccurate information:
"I believe that one of the most significant obstacles that we face as educators is that this powerful relationship that exists within schools is not present between schools. Schools exist in a competitive almost combative environment that is totally appropriate on the sports field but detrimental in the education arena. Schools compete for pupils, they compete for media space and proclaim exam results like trophies.
What this does is set up a fragmented series of islands that rarely share, rarely, collaborate in any meaningful way and rarely fully trust each other. This is holding back the ability to grow as a collective and unified force. The countries that are often seen as International successes, like Singapore and Finland, are successful partly because they have reduced this artificial sense of competition between schools.
One of the potential advantages of the HUB concept is that is will give us a chance, an opportunity [should we decide to take it] to break down these artificial and inhibiting barriers and start to come together as a collective working together for the improvement of all, not just our immediate pupils. In that way we may be able to reflect and emulate the relationships that are so powerful in individual schools across a region and across Aotearoa."
The brochure finishes with this:
I suggest that, rather than believing all of the information on this brochure and automatically saying 'No' to The Haque Plan?! (the website referenced on the brochure doesn't seem to be live yet), that you join the conversation at conversation.education.govt,nz,,read the Our Schooling Futures: Stronger Together Whiria Nga Kura Tuatinitini, attend any of the community workshops being run by the Review Team and make a meaningful submission.
There is no simple Yes or No response. Like me, you will find some of the recommendations exciting and aspirational, others you will not be so certain about.
8 comments:
Thank you for this Maurie. I attended a public meeting in Hamilton. From the outside it may have appeared that the feeling in the room was against the proposals. But that was because those voices were insistent, loud and most had personal grievances i.e. they didn't seem able to see the bigger picture. A couple of people who managed to speak in favour were loudly applauded. I've also spoken to many teachers who, as you say, have been given a synopsis by their principals and not having time to delve deeper, have taken it on face value. The conversation does need to happen more widely and in depth. Hopefully, your post provides an opportunity for those who don't have time to draft such an eloquent argument to share it with their school communities to encourage debate.
A balanced, sensible, fair account, as always Principal Possum! Thank you for bringing it to our attention and your on-going stance in this battle. As you say many may be too busy with their heads down doing the job of life to know much about what is going on. You have many supporters and given the "have nots" are such a big group and getting bigger it seems, perhaps sense will prevail in the end.
A couple of thoughts spring to mind about his rebuttals...
If principals have right of renewal then why bother with 5 year contracts?
If students have the right to attend their LOCAL school then this implies no right to choice..ie zoning. This will impact on larger schools..but also on smaller ones. I didagree with the rebuttal but not the intent.
As far as boards employing their choice of principal goes the document says the hubs will work closely with boards...the exact nature of this is unclear. Though there is mention of veto rights..implying hubs will make a decision.
Regards boards/principals losing control over op grants, property and staffing recruitmentand entitlements- the document refers to " delegation back opportunities" to principals..although it is unclear what these are.
I've always felt the right to choice has a too high a place in the pecking order. Should definitely come below the right to equity. I also have no issue having a conversation about my leadership and career direction every 5 years. That would be a valuable korero for all principals to have. Thanks for your comments.
Thanks for taking the time to comment.
Thanks for your comments Thistle.
Hi Maurie, thank for being so open with your insights and perspective. I'm keen too that the ideas, assumptions and philosophical underpinnings are aired and discussed as openly and widely as possible. Hence I've organised this event https://www.eventbrite.co.nz/e/tomorrows-schools-panel-discussion-tickets-58031488745 with help of VUW Ed Faculty. I hope all interested parties will attend on 1st April (sorry it's in Wellington not Auckland!)
Thanks for responding, Briar. Really keen for there to be a willingness to have an open discussion. Best of luck with the event.
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